Growth Mindset

Organizations that experiment and learn faster than others are those that succeed.

Agile organizations are fundamentally learning organizations at all levels; whether small & specific (e.g. this feature didn’t sell well, so let’s change it) or large & systemic (we need to change our governance model based on this new information). Learning is more than just observing. It’s taking the observations, determining its worth, then internalizing & making it the new reality for the organization.

Sometimes referred to as a Learning Mindset, the application of a Growth Mindset results in continuous improvement. Feedback loops, such as “inspect and adapt”, and practices, such as the retrospective, enable teams, divisions and organizations to improve both what they do and (more importantly) how they do it. Like the woodcutter who refuses to sharpen his ax because he has too many trees to cut down, organizations that do not improve both the way they work and their products themselves will ultimately be out-competed in the market.

This also brings in the important concept of slack. Create the space to slow down, identify opportunity, experiment, and learn. Individuals who always work at capacity are generally so hyperfocused on their work that they are unable to identify opportunities to improve. Slack also helps to build change resilience – the ability to mentally deal with organizational change and adaptation.

Central to a Growth Mindset is the ability to experiment, fail fast (with a small “blast radius”) and recover faster. Don’t think of failure as making a mistake, but rather as an opportunity to learn. Organizations can make it “safe to fail” by recognizing that failure is part of daily work and not something you blame or judge people for. Some organizations go further by introducing formal or informal support mechanisms like Failure KPIs, parallel experiments, (and selecting the highest performing option) or simply providing an environment where learning from failure is easily identified, recognized and rewarded.

Moving from Theory to Practice

Your goal is to promote a culture of learning and experimentation across the organization.

Say “I Don’t Know”

A learning culture starts with managers leading by example. Leaders need to acknowledge; “I don’t know” and “let’s find out together”. Teams need to have time to explore and research new ideas, even if they might fail. Start using the language of experimentation and reward evidence of learning rather than the answer.

Celebrate Failure & Learning

While having a growth mindset does mean being willing to push boundaries and try new things, it also comes with a commensurate reality of failure. Failure needs to be seen as an opportunity to learn, rather than a failure to do. Promote ceremonies that recognize, celebrate, and reward experimentation and learning from failure. Adopting practices like failure KPIs and experimentation retrospectives are some effective tools available to you.

Shorten Feedback Loops

Feedback can come from many different sources; customers, colleagues, partners, etc. Regardless of its source, the ability to listen and use this feedback is fundamental to a learning organization. The faster you can learn, the faster you will adapt. Develop processes to capture feedback as early as reasonably possible and share it with the appropriate teams so they can act upon it quickly. Set yourself a goal to halve your current feedback loop.

Measuring your Business Agility Maturity

Crawl

Walk

Run

Fly

Learning Mindset

We have an organizational expectation of learning and experimentation. Failure is not seen as making a mistake, but rather as an opportunity to learn.

We provide an environment where it is “safe to fail”. We encourage people (especially leaders) to speak up and share their failures as learning opportunities.

We regularly (but safely) push both leaders and teams outside their comfort zones to provide opportunities for personal growth.

Learning is no longer just “safe”, but expected. We have an organization that requires (and funds) people to experiment, learn and fail.

Relentless Improvement

Feedback loops (e.g. “inspect and adapt”) and associated practices (such as the retrospective) are in place at a team level. Teams focus on improving both what they do and (more importantly) how they do it.

Process improvement is generally triggered by an internal drive to improve and to be more customer-centric.

A learning culture with feedback loops and associated practices has taken root throughout the organization. Teams, divisions, and our entire organization focus on improving both what they do and (more importantly) how they do it.

We have built a culture of excellence through learning and experimentation. It is a critical part of who we are.

Insights

Research

Our research papers are authoritative studies on key topics and 'wicked problems' across all domains of Business Agility! Our goal is to provide clarity through all the buzzwords and

Library Steward

This section is currently un-stewarded. If you have a passion for this space and would like to take ownership for the guidance and insights within, please contact Evan Leybourn. The stewards of the Business Agility Library are leaders in their field and we quite literally couldn’t create such amazing content without their support. These people & organisations are leaders in the community and, through their actions and insights, continue to expand the horizon of business agility for us all.